Three School Years of State Leadership of LRSD: Rising Equity, Declining Adequacy

Free school system.

“Intelligence and virtue being the safeguards of liberty and the bulwark of a free and good government, the State shall ever maintain a general, suitable and efficient system of free public schools and shall adopt all suitable means to secure to the people the advantages and opportunities of education.”

Arkansas Constitution, Article 14, Section 1

Supervision of schools.

“The supervision of public schools, and the execution of the laws regulating the same, shall be vested in and confided to, such officers as may be provided for by the General Assembly.”

Arkansas Constitution, Article 14, Section 4

In 2006, after the Arkansas Supreme Court decision in Lake View School District No. 25 v. Huckabee in 2005, the Eighty-fifth General Assembly passed acts upon the recommendation of the House and Senate Interim Committees on Education resulting in a system of education that is “adequate and equitable.”

On January 28, 2015, the State Board of Education exercised its Constitutional authority granted by the General Assembly and voted to take over the Little Rock School District and dismiss its local elected board. At the time, one school in Academic Distress (three-year average of less than 49.5% of students proficient) could trigger state takeover. Little Rock had six schools in Academic Distress, including three of its five high schools.

Three full school years later (three years and ten months total), how has the state performed in making the district “adequate and equitable?”

Equity

In the Saturday, September 23, 2017 Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, Rita Sklar of the Arkansas ACLU, repeated what has become a constant talking point of those opposed to both charter schools and the State’s intervention in the Little Rock School District.

“Here in Little Rock, the process of re-segregating our classrooms has accelerated since the state takeover of the Little Rock School District in 2015, and new state-initiated and authorized charter schools are being created at a breakneck pace and with a fervor that is obscene.”

And yet, no evidence is ever provided regarding the district’s “re-segregation” since State control nor the charters’ alleged role as accomplices. In fact, the district’s decades-long, locally-controlled history of “re-segregation”- via gerrymandered, non-contiguous attendance zones, preferential magnet admissions, and bussing of Hispanic high school students – is conveniently ignored.

The reason no evidence is ever provided is because none exists. In fact, the truth is just the opposite of the status quo’s re-segregation fabrication.

Here are demographic data for the district since the advent of the first charter school in 2004.

  • District enrollment has dropped 5,363 students (-12%) over the past 15 years
  • African-American enrollment has dropped 3,490 students (-21%) over the past 15 years (65% of total)
  • White enrollment has dropped 1,873 students (-31%) over the past 15 years (35% of total)
  • African-American and White enrollment has essentially declined 1 percentage point a year for the past fifteen years for an overall decline of 24%
  • Hispanic enrollment has grown 2,053 students (+167%) in the same period
  • As a percentage of enrollment, Hispanic enrollment has grown from 5% to 15% over the past 15 years
  • For the first time in fifteen years, Hispanic enrollment dropped (-71) between 2017-18 and 2018-19
  • African-American enrollment is at its lowest number (13,248) and percentage (61%) on modern record
  • White enrollment is at its highest number (4,095) in five years and highest percentage (19%) in six years
  • The gap between African-American and White students is lowest in number (9,153) on modern record and lowest percentage (76%/24%) in nine years
2 or More
Races
AsianBlackHispanicNative American/
Alaskan
Native Hawaiian/
Pacific Islander
WhiteTotalTotal
Black/White
Enrollment
Black/White
Enrollment Gap
2004-05*NA43016,738 (69%)1,226 (5%)62NA5,968 (24%)24,42422,706 (93%)10,770
(74%/26%)
2005-06NA39917,173 (68%)1,343 (5%)69NA6,111 (24%)25,09523,284 (93%)11,062
(74%/26%)
2006-07NA41217,432 (68%)1,553 (7%)76NA6,027 (24%)25,55023,459 (92%)11,405
(74%/26%)
2007-08NA43617,715 (69%)1,733 (7%)81NA5,773 (22%)25,73823,488 (91%)11,942
(75%/25%)
2008-09**NA43216,936 (69%)1,865 (8%)73NA5,354 (22%)24,66022,290 (90%)11,582
(76%/24%)
2009-10NA45016,574 (68%)1,927 (8%)76NA5,363 (22%)24,38021,937 (90%)11,211
(76%/24%)
2010-1112650916,245 (67%)2,174 (9%)8325,087 (21%)24,22621,332 (88%)11,158
(76%/24%)
2011-1217753416,114 (67%)2,322 (10%)7584,819 (20%)24,04920,933 (87%)11,295
(77%/23%)
2012-1319952315,708 (67%)2,540 (11%)6964,549 (19%)23,59420,257 (86%)11,159
(78%/22%)
2013-1422757915,689 (66%)2,728 (12%)6494,380 (19%)23,67620,069 (85%)11,309
(78%/22%)
2014-1527155715,371 (66%)2,925 (13%)65104,164 (18%)23,36319,535 (84%)11,207
(79%/21%)
2015-16***27256715,070 (65%)3,124 (13%)55114,065 (18%)23,16419,135 (83%)11,005
(79%/21%)
2016-1728556314,603 (64%)3,183 (14%)57144,054 (18%)22,75918,657 (82%)10,549
(78.3%/21.7%)
2017-1831859514,040 (63%)3,350 (15%)54103,971 (18%)22,33818,011 (81%)10,069
(78%/22%)
2018-19241 (1%)671 (3%)13,248 (61%)3,279 (15%)53 (0%)8 (0%)4,095 (19%)21,59517,343 (80%)9,153 (76%/24%)
TOTAL
LOSS/GAIN
+115 (+91%)+241 (+56%)-3,490 (-21%)+2,053 (+167%)-9 (-15%)12 (+600%)-1,873 (-31%)-2,829 (-12%)-5,363 (-24%)-1,617 (-15%)
BEFORE STATE
CONTROL
LOSS/GAIN
+271+127
(+30%)
-1,367
(-8%)
+1,699
(+139%)
+3
(+1%)
NA-1,804
(-30%)
-1,061
(-4%)
-3,171
(-14%)
+437
(+5%/-5%)
STATE CONTROL
LOSS/GAIN
+30 (+11%)+114 (+20%)-2,123 (-14%)+354 (+12%)-8 (-12%)-2 (-20%)-69 (-2%)-1,768 (-8%-2,192 (-11%)-2,054 (-18%)

* First Year of Charters
** First Year of African-American Majority Board
*** First Year of State Takeover

Meanwhile, at the charters and neighboring school district…

District/School2 or More
Races
AsianBlackHispanicNative American/
Alaskan
Native Hawaiian/
Pacific Islander
WhiteTotal
LRSD241 (1%)671 (3%)13,248 (61%)3,279 (15%)53 (0.2%)8 (0%)4,095
(19%)
21,595
PCSSD (South of River)111 (3%)178 (4%)1,576 (38%)520 (12%)16 (0%)1 (0%)1,773 (42%)4,175
All Little Rock
Charters*
229 (4%)206 (3%)3,389 (56%)1,019 (17%)15 (0%)2 (0%)1,457 (19%)6,001
Covenant Keepers0032 (28%)82 (72%)000114
eStem160 (5%)53 (2%)1,783 (58%)258 (8%)7 (0%)2 (0%)1,129 (20%)3,070
Exalt7 (2%)0150 (30%)242 (60%)000406
LISA Academy45 (3%)142 (10%)587 (43%)371 (27%)6 (0%)0223 (16%)1,374
Little Rock Prep2 (0%)0319 (88%)35 (10%)005 (1%)361
Premier00104 (90%)5 (4%)007 (6%)116
Quest7 (4%)11 (7%)50 (31%)12 (7%)2 (1%)081 (50%)163
ScholarMade7 (2.5%)0253 (93%)7 (2.5%)005 (2%)  272
SIA Tech1 (1%)0111 (89%)7 (6%)006 (5%)125

 * Friendship Public Charter School will open in 2019 at 3615 West 25th Street.

Here are the facts:

  • Open-enrollment public charter school enrollment in Little Rock is 6,001
    • 3,389 (56%) African-American
    • 1,134 (19%) White – Same percentage as the Little Rock School District
  • African-Americans choose Little Rock charter schools at a rate three times that of Whites
  • There are over twice as many African-Americans in Little Rock charters schools than there are in Little Rock PCSSD schools (1,576)

Though dramatic improvement has occurred during the State’s watch, true equity will not come to the Little Rock School District until:

  • Central’s sprawling, preferentially gerrymandered, non-contiguous attendance zone is abolished
  • Attendance zones only applied to neighborhood elementary schools
  • All middle and high school attendance zones replaced with feeder schools (e.g. Fulbright, Roberts, Terry feeding Pinnacle View Middle School)
  • Students no longer bussed, Balkanized based solely on culture
  • Preferential and audition-based magnet, academy admissions for intra-district schools of choice replaced by open-enrollment, blind lotteries
  • Schools are opened, closed, reconstituted based solely on current, projected demand

It’s now solely up to the State to correct what decades of local control created and perpetuated.

Adequacy

Adequacy (i.e. academic performance, growth) is a different story.

In the school year following the State’s intervention in Little Rock, the State changed its summative assessment from PARCC to ACT Aspire (Grades 3-10) and ACT (Grade 11). Three years later, we now have two years of growth, performance data.

ACT Aspire (Grades 3 – 10) – Rounded Percentage of Students Meeting/Exceeding Readiness
* Original Six Academic Distress Schools (Three-year Average of Less than 49.5% of Students Proficient)
Bold indicates decline in all subjects in one year or over two

2015-162016-171-Year Growth 2017-18 1-Year Growth2-Year Growth 
State Math 43% 47% +4 47% 0 +4
State English 68% 70% +2 70% 0 +2
State Reading 39% 41% +2 41% 0 +2
State Science 38% 40% +2 40% 0 +2
LRSD Math 33% 37% +4 36% -1 +3
LRSD English 57% 59% +2 59% 0 +2
LRSD Reading 30% 32% +2 32% 0 +2
LRSD Science 23% 29% +6 29% 0 +6
Bale Math28% 23% -527%+4-1
Bale English45% 41% -447% +6+2
Bale Reading 15% 12% -316%+3 +1
Bale Science 19% 10% -5 16% +5 +1
Bale Cumulative   -17  +19 +2
*Baseline Math 32% 40% +8 25% -15 -7
*Baseline English 41% 50% +9 44% -6 +3
*Baseline Reading 15% 16% +1 12% -4 -3
*Baseline Science 14% 19% +3 13% -5 -2
*Baseline Cumulative   +21  -30 -9
Booker Math 39% 43% +4 43% 0 +4
Booker English 63% 62% -1 62% 0 -1
Booker Reading 28% 25% -3 30% +6 +3
Booker Science 25% 30% +2 32% +1 +4
Booker Cumulative   +2  +7 +9
Brady Math 20% 27% +6 29% +2 +9
Brady English 54% 51% -3 59% +8 +5
Brady Reading 12% 18% +6 21% +3 +9
Brady Science 10% 16% +4 19% +2 +6
Brady Cumulative   +13  +16 +29
Carver Math 46% 50% +4 55% +5 +8
Carver English 58% 65% +7 74% +9 +16
Carver Reading 31% 34% +2 40% +6 +9
Carver Science 34% 35% +4 39% +4 +8
Carver Cumulative   +17  +25 +41
Chicot Math NA 29% NA 27% -2 NA
Chicot English NA 46% NA 46% 0 NA 
Chicot Reading NA 18% NA 18% 0 NA
Chicot Science NA 16% NA 13% -3 NA
Chicot Cumulative  NA  -5 NA
Dodd Math 28% 36% +8 33% -3 +5
Dodd English 58% 55% -3 55% +1 -3
Dodd Reading 13% 20% +7 22% +3 +10
Dodd Science 20% 20% 0 22% +1 +1
Dodd Cumulative   +12  +1 +13
Forest Park Math 87% 82% -5 78% -4 -9
Forest Park English 91% 92% +1 92% 0 +2
Forest Park Reading 67% 68% 0 66% -2 -1
Forest Park Science 72% 67% -9 72% +5 -4
Forest Park Cumulative   -3  0 -4
Fulbright Math 60% 51% -9 51% -1 -9
Fulbright English 71% 72% +1 75% +3 +5
Fulbright Reading 39% 40% +1 47% +6 +1
Fulbright Science 44% 39% -5 41% +1 +1
Fulbright Cumulative   -12  +10 +4
Gibbs Math 69% 65% -4 61% -4 -7
Gibbs English 85% 88% +3 82% -6 -3
Gibbs Reading 49% 53% +5 45% -8 -4
Gibbs Science 45% 50% +5 46% -4 +1
Gibbs Cumulative   +9  -23 -13
Jefferson Math 63% 72% +9 80% +8 +17
Jefferson English  83% 87% +4 88% 0 +4
Jefferson Reading 45% 62% +17 65% +3 +20
Jefferson Science 52% 68% +16 67% -1 +15
Jefferson Cumulative   +46  +10 +57
King Math 38% 39% 0 31% -8 -8
King English 53% 53% 0 53% +1 0
King Reading 23% 24% +1 24%0 +1
King Science 18% 22% +3 20%-1 +2
King Cumulative   +4 -9 -3
Mabelvale Math 26% 34% +8 29% -5 +3
Mabelvale English 50% 53% +3 49% -4 -1
Mabelvale Reading 13% 19% +6 18% -2 +4
Mabelvale Science 13% 18% +5 14% -4 +1
Mabelvale Cumulative   +22  -15 +7
McDermott Math 34% 42% +8 28% -13 -5
McDermott English 64% 62% -3 55% -7 -10
McDermott Reading 25% 23% -2 22% -1 -3
McDermott Science 21% 20% -1 23% +2 +2
McDermott Cumulative   +2  -19 -16
Meadowcliff Math 27% 32% +6 29% -3 +3
Meadowcliff English 52% 47% -5 50% +3 -2
Meadowcliff Reading 12% 17% +5 24% +7 +12
Meadowcliff Science 19% 16% -3 21% +5 -2
Meadowcliff Cumulative   +3  +12 +17
Otter Creek Math 39% 43% +4 38% -5 -1
Otter Creek English 61% 65% +4 59% -6 -1
Otter Creek Reading 29% 27% -2 26% -1 -2
Otter Creek Science 26% 28% +2 24% -4 -2
Otter Creek Cumulative   +8  -15 -8
Pulaski Heights Math 53% 66% +14 57% -9 +4
Pulaski Heights English 72% 78% +5 75% -3 +2
Pulaski Heights Reading 50% 52% +2 54% +2 +3
Pulaski Heights Science 50% 57% +7 54% -2 +4
Pulaski Heights Cumulative   +28  -13 +14
Roberts Math 80% 83% +3 82% 0 +2
Roberts English 86% 90% +4 89% -1 +3
Roberts Reading 68% 69% +1 68% 0 0
Roberts Science 73% 70% -3 67% -4 -6
Roberts Cumulative   -5  -5 -1
Rockefeller Math 25% 31% +5 32% +1 +7
Rockefeller English 49% 53% +3 66% +13 +16
Rockefeller Reading 19% 21% +3 22% +1 +4
Rockefeller Science 21% 22% +1 22% 0 +2
Rockefeller Cumulative   +12  +16 +28
Romine Math 31% 27% -5 21% -5 -10
Romine English 48% 45% -3 43% -1 -5
Romine Reading 15% 16% 0 15% 0 0
Romine Science 13% 20% +7 12% -8 -1
Romine Cumulative   -1  -15 -16
Stephens Math 34% 28% -7 23% -5 -12
Stephens English 54% 49% -6 45% -4 -9
Stephens Reading 15% 18% +3 13% -5 -2
Stephens Science 12% 16% +3 10% -6 -3
Stephens Cumulative   -7  -19 -25
Terry Math 59% 56% -3 44% -12 -15
Terry English 72% 69% -3 62% -7 -10
Terry Reading 40% 34% -7 40% +6 0
Terry Science 33% 32% -1 31% 0 -1
Terry Cumulative   -14  -13 -27
Wakefield Math 24% 42% +18 39% -3 +15
Wakefield English 54% 51% -3 47% -5 -8
Wakefield Reading 16% 19% +3 20% +2 +4
Wakefield Science 12% 19% +6 18% 0 +6
Wakefield Cumulative   +24  -6 +17
Washington Math 23% 30% +7 18% -12 -5
Washington English 37% 44% +7 46% +1 +9
Washington Reading 15% 15% -1 10% -4 -5
Washington Science 14% 15% +1 10% -5 -3
Washington Cumulative   +14  -20 -5
Watson Math 18% 21% -3 19% -2 +1
Watson English 32% 43% +11 38% -5 +6
Watson Reading 9% 14% +6 16% +1 +7
Watson Science 6% 12% +6 11% -1 +5
Watson Cumulative   +20  -7 +19
Western Hills Math 29% 40% +11 35% -5 +6
Western Hills English 63% 64% +1 57% -6 -5
Western Hills Reading 25% 21% -4 26% +5 +1
Western Hills Science 25% 21% -4 26% +6 +2
Western Hills Cumulative   +4  0 +4
Williams Math 68% 71% +3 71% 1 +3
Williams English 84% 79% -6 83% +5 -1
Williams Reading 52% 56% +4 55% -1 +3
Williams Science 54% 57% +3 54% -3 0
Williams Cumulative   +4  +2 +5
      
Forest Heights STEM (K-8) Math 64% 69% +6 65% -5 +1
Forest Heights STEM (K-8) English 88% 87% -1 89% -2 +1
Forest Heights STEM (K-8) Reading 57% 58% +1 59% +1 +2
Forest Heights STEM (K-8) Science  59% 62% +3 59 -3 0
Forest Heights STEM (K-8) Cumulative   +9  -5 +5
       
*Cloverdale Math 16% 17% +1 11% -5 -4
*Cloverdale English 41% 45% +3 42% -2 +1
*Cloverdale Reading 13% 18% +6 17% -1 -5
*Cloverdale Science 11% 16% +5 13% -2 +2
*Cloverdale Cumulative   +15  -11 +4
Dunbar Math 23% 34% +11 24% -10 +1
Dunbar English 55% 61% +7 54% -7 0
Dunbar Reading 29% 32% +3 23% -8 -6
Dunbar Science 20% 26% +6 19% -7 -1
Dunbar Cumulative   +27  -32 -6
*Henderson Math 18% 18% 0 17% -1 -1
*Henderson English 46% 53% +7 51% -2 +5
*Henderson Reading  22% 23% +1 19% -4 -3
*Henderson Science 13% 15% +2 12% -3 -1
*Henderson Cumulative   +10  -10 0
Mabelvale Math 20% 29% +9 24% -5 +4
Mabelvale English 54% 51% -3 53% +2 -2
Mabelvale Reading 20% 22% +2 23% +1 +3
Mabelvale Science 14% 14% 0 15% +2 +1
Mabelvale Cumulative   +8  -1 +6
Mann Math 38% 44% +6 44% 0 +6
Mann English 71% 70% -1 72% +3 +1
Mann Reading 40% 40% 0 38% -1 -1
Mann Science 34% 40% +6 34% -7 0
Mann Cumulative   +11  -5 +6
Pinnacle View Math NA 64% NA 56% -8 NA
Pinnacle View English NA 85% NA 79% -5 NA
Pinnacle View Reading NA 54% NA 54% 0 NA
Pinnacle View Science NA 57% NA 56% -1 NA
Pinnacle View Cumulative   NA  -14 NA
Pulaski Heights Math 49% 49% 0 50% +1 +1
Pulaski Heights English 75% 71% -4 74% +3 -1
Pulaski Heights Reading 45% 45% +1 48% +2 +3
Pulaski Heights Science 46% 42% -4 42% 0 -4
Pulaski Heights Cumulative   -7  +6 -1
      
Central Math 32% 33% +1 37% +4 +5
Central English 60% 64% +4 58% -5 -2
Central Reading 43% 43% +1 39% -4 -3
Central Science 32% 37% +5 37% -1 +5
Central Cumulative   +11  -6 +4
*Fair Math 5% 5% +1 5% 0 +1
*Fair English 30% 29% -1 25% -4 -5
*Fair Reading 13% 14% +1 9% -5 -4
*Fair Science 4% 5% +1 4% -1 0
*Fair Cumulative   +2  -10 -7
*Hall Math 2% 4% +2 4% 0 +2
*Hall English 19% 21% +2 18%-2 0
*Hall Reading 8% 11% +3 10%-1 +2
*Hall Science 2% 4% +2 4%+1 +2
*Hall Cumulative   +9  -3 +6
*McClellan Math 4% 6% +2 7% 0 +2
*McClellan English 26% 22% -4 27% +5 +1
*McClellan Reading 10% 14% +4 12% -2 +2
*McClellan Science 4% 8% +4 8% 0 +4
*McClellan Cumulative   +6  +3 +9
Parkview Math 22% 29% +7 27% -2 +5
Parkview English 57% 62% +5 56% -6 -1
Parkview Reading 33%  45% +13 32% -13 -1
Parkview Science 27% 29% +2 26% -3 -1
Parkview Cumulative   +27  -23 +3

On ACT Aspire, in 152 (38 schools, 4 subjects each) opportunities for one-year growth in 2016-17:

  • 103 Improved
  • 43 Declined
  • 6 Stayed Same
  • Bale and Terry Declined in All Subjects
  • Greatest one-year growth was Jefferson: +46
  • Greatest one-year decline was Bale: -17

On ACT Aspire, in 160 opportunities for one-year growth in 2017-18:

  • 48 Improved
  • 93 Declined
  • 19 Stayed Same
  • Baseline, Gibbs, Mabelvale Elem., Otter Creek, Stephens, Cloverdale, Dunbar, Henderson, Parkview Declined in All Subjects
  • Chicot, Roberts, Romine, Pinnacle View, Fair Declined or Stayed Same in All Subjects
  • Greatest one-year growth was Carver: +25
  • Greatest one-year decline was Dunbar: -32

On ACT Aspire, in 152 opportunities  for two-year growth in 2017-18:

  • 81 Improved
  • 62 Declined
  • 9 Stayed Same
  • Otter Creek and Stephens Declined in All Subjects
  • Romine and Terry Declined or Stayed Same in All Subjects
  • Greatest two-year growth was Jefferson: +57
  • Greatest two-year decline was Terry: -27
    NOTE: Principal Sandra Register left Terry for Jefferson

Leadership Ranking (ACT Aspire 1-Year Growth/Decline)

  • 12 Improved; 2 Stayed Same; 27 Declined
  • Carver (Principal Clifton Woodley): +25
  • Bale (Principal Roxie Browning): +19
  • Brady (Principal Tyrone Harris): +16
  • Rockefeller (Principal Shoutell Richardson): +16
  • Meadowcliff (Principal Cynthia Collins): +12
  • Fulbright (Principal Sherkeyer Jackson): +10
  • Jefferson (Principal Sandra Register): +10
  • Booker (Principal Cheryl Carson): +7
  • Pulaski Heights Middle (Principal Daryl Powell): +6
  • McClellan (Principal Patricia A. Ellis Brunston): +3
  • Williams (Principal Connie Green): +2
  • Dodd (Principal Melinda Modica): +1
  • Forest Park (Principal Theresa Courtney-Ketcher): 0
  • Western Hills (Principal Teresa Richardson): 0
  • Mabelvale Elementary (Principal Darian L. Smith): -1
  • Mabelvale Middle (Principal Rhonda Hall): -1
  • Chicot (Principal E. Yvonne Jones): -3
  • Hall (Principal Mark Roberts): -3
  • Forest Heights STEM (Principal Amy Cooper): -5
  • Mann (Principal Keith McGee): -5
  • Roberts (Steven Helmick): -5
  • Central (Principal Nancy Rousseau): -6
  • Wakefield (Principal Les Taylor): -6
  • Watson (Principal ?): -7
  • King (Principal Karen Carter): -9
  • Fair (Principal Michael Anthony): -10
  • Henderson (Principal Replaced): -10
  • Cloverdale (Principal Wanda Ruffins): -11
  • Pulaski Heights Elementary (Principal Anna Lloyd): -13
  • Terry (Principal Stephanie Franklin): -13
  • *Pinnacle View (Principal Jay Pickering): -14
  • Mabelvale Elementary (Principal Darian L. Smith): -15
  • Otter Creek (Principal Wendy Minor): -15
  • Romine (Principal Suzanne Ray Proctor): -15
  • McDermott (Principal Pam Dial): -19
  • Stephens (Principal Phillip Carlock): -19
  • Washington (Principal Katherine Snyder): -20
  • Gibbs (Principal Tina Greenwood): -23
  • Parkview (Principal Randy Rutherford): -23
  • Baseline (Principal Replaced): -30
  • Dunbar (Principal Eunice Thrasher): -32

* Grew from 6th Grade to 6th and 7th Grades

Leadership Ranking (ACT Aspire 2-Year Growth/Decline)

  • 23 Improved; 1 Stayed Same; 14 Declined
  • Jefferson (Principal Sandra Register): +57
  • Carver (Principal Clifton Woodley): +41
  • Brady (Principal Tyrone Harris): +29
  • Rockefeller (Principal Shoutell Richardson): +28
  • Watson (Principal ?): +19
  • Meadowcliff (Principal Cynthia Collins): +17
  • Wakefield (Principal Les Taylor): +17
  • Pulaski Heights Elementary (Principal Anna Lloyd): +14
  • Dodd (Principal Melinda Modica): +13
  • Booker (Principal Cheryl Carson): +9
  • McClellan (Principal Patricia A. Ellis Brunston): +9
  • Mabelvale Elementary (Principal Darian L. Smith): +7
  • Hall (Principal Mark Roberts): +6
  • Mabelvale Middle (Principal Rhonda Hall): +6
  • Mann (Principal Keith McGee): +6
  • Forest Heights STEM (Principal Amy Cooper): +5
  • Williams (Principal Connie Green): +5
  • Central (Principal Nancy Rousseau): +4
  • Cloverdale (Principal Wanda Ruffins): +4
  • Fulbright (Principal Sherkeyer Jackson): +4
  • Western Hills (Principal Teresa Richardson): +4
  • Parkview (Principal Randy Rutherford): +3
  • Bale (Principal Roxie Browning): +2
  • Henderson (Principal Replaced): 0
  • Pulaski Heights Middle (Principal Daryl Powell): -1
  • Roberts (Steven Helmick): -1
  • King (Principal Karen Carter): -3
  • Forest Park (Principal Theresa Courtney-Ketcher): -4
  • Washington (Principal Katherine Snyder): -5
  • Dunbar (Principal Eunice Thrasher): -6
  • Fair (Principal Michael Anthony): -7
  • Otter Creek (Principal Wendy Minor): -8
  • Baseline (Principal Replaced): -9
  • Gibbs (Principal Tina Greenwood): -13
  • McDermott (Principal Pam Dial): -16
  • Romine (Principal Suzanne Ray Proctor): -16
  • Stephens (Principal Phillip Carlock): -25
  • Terry (Principal Stephanie Franklin): -27

* Grew from 6th Grade to 6th and 7th Grades

  • 10 Elementary and 2 Secondary Schools Cumulatively Declined Over Both One Year and Two:
    • Baseline (Principal Replaced)
    • Dunbar (Principal Eunice Thrasher)
    • Fair (Principal Michael Anthony)
    • Gibbs (Principal Tina Greenwood)
    • King (Principal Karen Carter)
    • McDermott (Principal Pam Dial)
    • Otter Creek (Principal Wendy Minor)
    • Roberts (Principal Seven Helmick)
    • Romine (Principal Suzanne Ray Proctor)
    • Stephens (Principal Phillip Carlock)
    • Terry (Principal Stephanie Franklin)
    • Washington (Principal Katherine Snyder)
  • 10 Elementary and 1 Secondary Schools Cumulatively Improved Over Both One Year and Two:
    • Bale (Principal Roxie Browning)
    • Booker (Principal Cheryl Carson)
    • Brady (Principal Tyrone Harris)
    • Carver (Principal Clifton Woodley)
    • Dodd (Principal Melinda Modica)
    • Fulbright (Principal Sherkeyer Jackson)
    • Jefferson (Principal Sandra Register)
    • McClellan (Principal Patricia A. Ellis Brunston)
    • Meadowcliff (Principal Cynthia Collins)
    • Rockefeller (Principal Shoutell Richardson)
    • Williams (Principal Connie Green)

ACT (Grade 11) – Percentage of Students Meeting/Exceeding Readiness

2015-16 2016-17 1-Year Growth 2017-18 1-Year Growth 2-Year Growth 
State Math 24% 24% 0 24% 0 0
State English 49% 49% 0 48% -1 -1
State Reading 31% 30% -1 30% 0 -1
State Science 24% 21% -3 22% -1 -2
State All Four Subjects 14% 14% 0 14% 0 0
LRSD Math20% 20% 0 19%-1 -1
LRSD English 41% 39% -2 40% +1 -1
LRSD Reading 29% 26% -3 27% +1 -2
LRSD Science 21% 18% -3 19% +1 -2
LRSD All Four Subjects 14% 13% -1 14% +1 0
Central Math 32% 37% +5 33% -4 +1
Central English 53% 56% +3 54% -2 +1
Central Reading 40% 43% +3 30% -13 -10
Central Science 31% 33% +2 33% 0 +2
Central All Four Subjects 22% 27% +5 25% -2 +3
Fair Math 2% 4% +2 1% -3 -1
Fair English 16% 15% -1 16% +1 0
Fair Reading 7% 7% 0 6% -1 -1
Fair Science 3% 4% +1 1% -3 -2
Fair All Four Subjects 2% 1% -1 0% -1 -2
Hall Math 3% 2% -1 4% +2 -1
Hall English 17% 8% -9 19% +9 +2
Hall Reading  12% 3% -9 9% +6 -3
Hall Science 4% 1% -3 3% +2 -1
Hall All Four Subjects 2% 0 -2 2% +2 0
McClellan Math 5% 6% +1 3% -3 -2
McClellan English 13% 15% +2 11% -4 -2
McClellan Reading 5% 3% -2 4% +1 -1
McClellan Science 2% 3% +1 0% -3 -2
McClellan All Four Subjects 1% 1% 0 0% -1 -1
Parkview Math 23% 17% -6 20% +3 -3
Parkview English 61% 51% -10 52% +1 -9
Parkview Reading 41% 30% -11 34% +4 -7
Parkview Science 28% 16% -12 20% +4 -8
Parkview All Four Subjects 16% 9% -7 13% +4 -3

On ACT, in 25 (5 schools, 5 areas each) opportunities for one-year growth in 2016-17:

  • 10 Improved
  • 13 Declined
  • 2 Stayed Same
  • Hall and Parkview Declined in All Subjects
  • State and District Declined or Stayed Same in All Subjects
  • Greatest one-year growth was Central +18
  • Greatest one-year decline was Parkview -46

On ACT, in 25 opportunities for one-year growth in 2017-18:

  • 12 Improved
  • 12 Declined
  • 1 Stayed Same
  • 0 Declined in All Subjects
  • State and Central Declined or Stayed Same in All Subjects
  • Greatest one-year growth was Hall +21
  • Greatest one-year decline was Central -21

On ACT, in 25 opportunities  for two-year growth in 2017-18:

  • 5 Improved
  • 18 Declined
  • 2 Stayed Same
  • McClellan and Parkview Declined in All Subjects
  • State, District and Hall Declined or Stayed Same in All Subjects
  • While no high school had two-year growth, the least decline was a tie Central and Hall -3

Leadership Ranking (ACT 1-Year Growth/Decline)

  • Hall (Principal Mark Roberts): +21
  • Parkview (Principal Randy Rutherford): +16
  • Fair (Principal Michael Anthony): -7
  • McClellan (Principal Patricia Ellis-Brunston): -8
  • Central (Principal Nancy Rousseau): -21

Leadership Ranking (ACT 2-Year Growth/Decline)

  • Hall (Principal Mark Roberts – Only Responsible for One Year): -3
  • Central (Principal Nancy Rousseau): -3
  • Fair (Principal Michael Anthony): -6
  • McClellan (Principal Patricia Ellis-Brunston): -10
  • Parkview (Principal Randy Rutherford – Only Responsible for One Year): -30

Conclusion

Undoubtedly, progress has been made in the Litte Rock School District – in equity, in budget, in infrastructure. However, the district was taken over because of Academic Distress, and its progress (or lack thereof) in academics is woefully inadequate. In fact, rather than improving even incrementally, it is declining in most areas. Immediate, transformational, student-focused actions must be taken to, at the very least, ensure the district consistently improves in all areas by all measures.

That begins and ends with leadership. A school board (or in this case, the Arkansas Department of Education Commissioner acting in place of the board) hires one person to run the district – the superintendent. In Little Rock, the current superintendent and his predecessors have inexplicably chosen to retain (and in one case promote) the two deputies who have long presided over the academic decline of the district.

By simply examining the one and two-year improvement/decline in each of the schools, it is readily evident which building-level leaders are getting the job done on behalf of students and which are not.

The Little Rock School District’s challenges and opportunities are all about leadership – in the district, in the buildings, and in the classrooms. At all levels, any adults standing in the way of student success should gracefully step aside or be as swiftly removed as the previous board.

Disclaimer: Because data entered and calculated manually from Arkansas Department of Education, we welcome any correction(s).

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